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The view of the Atlantic City skyline from Wildlife Drive, a popular eight-mile stretch of road for birdwatchers through the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge. (TOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer)

Sandy Bauers

Inquirer GreenSpace Columnist

Three environmental groups sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today, contending that it improperly approved a Pennsylvania plan aimed at addressing haze pollution.

They say the plan fails to limit emissions of haze-causing chemicals from major facilities in the state, and that iconic parks and wilderness areas — from Shenandoah National Park in Virginia to the Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in New Jersey to as far as Acadia National Park in Maine — suffer because of it.

“The law on the books says we need to deal with the pollution choking our national parks,” said Matt Elliott, the Pennsylvania and Delaware program manager with the National Parks Conservation Association, one of the groups that sued. “The commonwealth and the EPA alike have turned a blind eye to their duty.”

The other groups are the Sierra Club, a national advocacy organization, and the Clean Air Council, based in Philadelphia.

Haze is formed by sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides and particulate matter.

Charles McPhedran, an attorney with Earthjustice, a nonprofit national environmental law organization, who represents the groups, said that Pennsylvania came up with a haze plan, as required, several years ago.

Neither the EPA nor the state Department of Environmental Protection responded to requests for comment.

Thomas Schuster, a representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign, said the state’s coal plants should not get a “free pass” to pollute.

Joseph O. Minott, executive director of the Clean Air Council, said the haze plan reflects an overall “attitude that Pennsylvania has about exporting its dirty air. Pennsylvania is very quick to point the finger at Ohio and West Virginia … for the dirty air that comes in to western Pennsylvania. But it is absolutely unwilling to recognize the air pollution that leaves Pennsylvania.”

“It needs to be more responsible,” he said. “It needs to step up to the plate and deal with its pollution.”